Publication | Closed Access
Spanking by Parents and Subsequent Antisocial Behavior of Children
311
Citations
30
References
1997
Year
The study investigates whether parental spanking causes later antisocial behavior in children, controlling for initial ASB levels. Using a national sample of 807 mother–child pairs, the authors applied analysis of variance, controlling for baseline ASB, socioeconomic status, child sex, and home emotional and cognitive support, to test whether spanking predicts increased ASB. Higher levels of spanking at baseline were associated with increased antisocial behavior two years later, even after controlling for confounders, indicating that corporal punishment may worsen, rather than reduce, child antisocial behavior.
To deal with the causal relationship between corporal punishment and antisocial behavior (ASB) by considering the level of ASB of the child at the start of the study.Data from interviews with a national sample of 807 mothers of children aged 6 to 9 years in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-Child Supplement. Analysis of variance was used to test the hypothesis that when parents use corporal punishment to correct ASB, it increases subsequent ASB. The analysis controlled for the level of ASB at the start of the study, family socio-economic status, sex of the child, and the extent to which the home provided emotional support and cognitive stimulation.Forty-four percent of the mothers reported spanking their children during the week prior to the study and they spanked them an average of 2.1 times that week. The more spanking at the start of the period, the higher the level of ASB 2 years later. The change is unlikely to be owing to the child's tendency toward ASB or to confounding with demographic characteristics or with parental deficiency in other key aspects of socialization because those variables were statistically controlled.When parents use corporal punishment to reduce ASB, the long-term effect tends to be the opposite. The findings suggest that if parents replace corporal punishment by nonviolent modes of discipline, it could reduce the risk of ASB among children and reduce the level of violence in American society.
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